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Social Sharing
evening ensemble: blouse and skirt
Not on view
In the 1940s and 1950s, Frederick Gibson Bayh—an in-house designer at the San Francisco department store Gump’s—attracted the attention of the national fashion press for his creation of new garments composed of antique European and Asian textiles, including Indian saris and Japanese obis. For this skirt, Bayh used the entire lower half of a Qing dynasty (1644–1911) Chinese dragon robe. These bureaucratic and imperial garments featured stylized symbols such as water, mountains, and dragons to indicate social status. By using the robe as raw material for a garment marketed to buyers in the United States, Bayh contributed to the wider mid-twentieth-century trend of cultural appropriation and commodification in European and American fashion.
- Designer
- Yves Saint Laurent
- House of
- Saint Laurent
- Title
- evening ensemble: blouse and skirt
- Date
- Fall/Winter 1976-1977 Haute Couture
- Place of Creation
- Paris
- Object Type
- Costume
- Medium
- Blouse: printed silk chiffon with synthetic metal strip supplementary weft patterning; silk thread braid; and silk thread ties and tassels Skirt: printed silk chiffon with synthetic metal strip supplementary weft; silk thread braid; silk velvet; and silk plain weave
- Credit Line
- From the collection of Mrs. John B. Quigley
- Accession Number
- 2016.35.11a-b